Itani, H.; Santa, M.; Keil, P.; Grundmeier, G.: Backside SERS Studies of Inhibitor Transport Through Polyelectrolyte Films on Ag-substrates. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 357 (2), pp. 480 - 486 (2011)
Posner, R.; Santa, M.; Grundmeier, G.: Wet- and Corrosive De-Adhesion Processes of Water-Borne Epoxy Film Coated Steel I. Interface Potentials and Characteristics of Ion Transport Processes. Journal of the Electrochemical Society 158 (3), pp. C29 - C35 (2011)
Santa, M.; Posner, R.; Grundmeier, G.: Wet- and Corrosive De-Adhesion Processes of Water-Borne Epoxy Film Coated Steel II. The Influence of -Glycidoxypropyltrimethoxysilane as an Adhesion Promoting Additive. Journal of the Electrochemical Society 158 (3), pp. C36 - C41 (2011)
Santa, M.; Posner, R.; Grundmeier, G.: In-situ study of the deterioration of thiazole/gold and thiazole/silver interfaces during interfacial ion transport processes. Journal of Electroanalytical Chemistry 643 (1-2), pp. 94 - 101 (2010)
Kundu, S.; Nagaiah, T.C.; Xia, W.; Wang, Y. M.; Van Dommele, S.; Bitter, J. H.; Santa, M.; Grundmeier, G.; Bron, M.; Schuhmann, W.et al.; Muhler, M.: Electrocatalytic Activity and Stability of Nitrogen-Containing Carbon Nanotubes in the Oxygen reduction Reaction. J. Phys. Chem. C 113 (32), pp. 14302 - 14310 (2009)
Santa, M.; Posner, R.; Grundmeier, G.: In-situ backside surface enhanced Raman study on the reactive wetting process at noble metal-monolayer interfaces supported by SKP, XPS and ToF-SIMS. Kurt Schwabe Symposium 2009, Erlangen, Germany (2009)
Santa, M.; Posner, R.; Grundmeier, G.: Surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy and Scanning Kelvin Probe studies of corrosive de-adhesion at polymer-metal interfaces. The 59th Annual Meeting of the International Society of Electrochemistry, Seville, Spain (2008)
Santa, M.: Combined in-situ spectroscopic and electrochemical studies of interfacial and interphasial reactions during adsorption and de-adhesion of polymer films on metals. Dissertation, Universität Paderborn, Paderborn, Germany (2010)
If manganese nodules can be mined in an environmentally friendly way, the critical metals needed for the energy transition could be produced with low CO2 emissions
Scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Sustainable Materials have developed a carbon-free, energy-saving method to extract nickel for batteries, magnets and stainless steel.
Max Planck scientists design a process that merges metal extraction, alloying and processing into one single, eco-friendly step. Their results are now published in the journal Nature.